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Information
Section: Education
Article: Five Homework
Strategies for Teaching Students with
Disabilities
Source: Cynthia Warger
(2001), ERIC/OSEP Digest
#E608*
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Page 1 of 1
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FIVE HOMEWORK
STRATEGIES FOR TEACHING STUDENTS WITH
DISABILITIES
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Homework is one aspect of the
general education curriculum that has been widely
recognized as important to academic success.
Teachers have long used homework to provide
additional learning time, strengthen study and
organizational skills, and in some respects, keep
parents informed of their children's progress.
Generally, when students with disabilities
participate in the general education curriculum,
they are expected to complete homework along with
their peers. But, just as students with
disabilities may need instructional accommodations
in the classroom, they may also need homework
accommodations.
Many students with
disabilities find homework challenging, and
teachers are frequently called upon to make
accommodations for these students. What research
supports this practice? This digest describes five
strategies that researchers have identified to
improve homework results for students with
disabilities.
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STRATEGY
1. GIVE CLEAR AND APPROPRIATE
ASSIGNMENTS
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- Teachers need to take
special care when assigning homework. If the
homework assignment is too hard, is perceived as
busy work, or takes too long to complete,
students might tune out and resist doing it.
Never send home any assignment that students
cannot do. Homework should be an extension of
what students have learned in class. To ensure
that homework is clear and appropriate, consider
the following tips from teachers for assigning
homework:
- Make sure students and
parents have information regarding the policy on
missed and late assignments, extra credit, and
available adaptations. Establish a set routine
at the beginning of the year.
- Assign work that the
students can do.
- Assign homework in small
units.
- Explain the assignment
clearly.
- Write the assignment on
the chalkboard and leave it there until the
assignment is due.
- Remind students of due
dates periodically.
- Coordinate with other
teachers to prevent homework overload. Students
concur with these tips. They add that teachers
can
- Establish a routine at
the beginning of the year for how homework will
be assigned.
- Assign homework toward
the beginning of class.
- Relate homework to
classwork or real life (and/or inform students
how they will use the content of the homework in
real life).
- Explain how to do the
homework, provide examples and write directions
on the chalkboard.
- Have students begin the
homework in class, check that they understand,
and provide assistance as necessary.
- Allow students to work
together on homework.
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STRATEGY
2. MAKE HOMEWORK ACCOMMODATIONS
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Make any necessary
modifications to the homework assignment before
sending it home. Identify practices that will be
most helpful to individual students and have the
potential to increase their involvement,
understanding, and motivation to learn. The most
common homework accommodations are to
- Provide additional
one-on-one assistance to students.
- Monitor students'
homework more closely.
- Allow alternative
response formats (e.g., allow the student to
audiotape an assignment rather than handwriting
it).
- Adjust the length of the
assignment.
- Provide a peer tutor or
assign the student to a study group.
- Provide learning tools
(e.g., calculators).
- Adjust evaluation
standards.
- Give fewer assignments.
It is important to check out
all accommodations with other teachers, students,
and their families. If teachers, students, or
families do not find homework accommodations
palatable, they may not use them.
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STRATEGY
3. TEACH STUDY SKILLS
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Both general and special
education teachers consistently report that
homework problems seem to be exacerbated by
deficient basic study skills. Many students,
particularly students with disabilities, need
instruction in study and organizational skills.
Here is a list of organizational strategies basic
to homework:
- Identify a location for
doing homework that is free of distractions.
- Have all materials
available and organized.
- Allocate enough time to
complete activities and keep on schedule.
- Take good notes.
- Develop a sequential plan
for completing multi-task assignments.
- Check assignments for
accuracy and completion before turning them in.
- Know how to get help when
it is needed.
- Turn in completed
homework on time.
Teachers can enhance homework
completion and accuracy by providing classroom
instruction in organizational skills. They should
talk with parents about how to support the
application of organizational skills at
home.
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STRATEGY
4. USE A HOMEWORK CALENDAR
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Students with disabilities
often need additional organizational support. Just
as adults use calendars, schedulers, lists, and
other devices to self-monitor activities, students
can benefit from these tools as well. Students with
disabilities can monitor their own homework using a
planning calendar to keep track of homework
assignments. Homework planners also can double as
home-school communication tools if they include a
space next to each assignment for messages from
teachers and parents. Here's how one teacher used a
homework planner to increase communication with
students' families and improve homework completion
rates: Students developed their own homework
calendars. Each page in the calendar reflected one
week. There was a space for students to write their
homework assignments and a column for
parent-teacher notes. The cover was a heavy card
stock that children decorated. Students were
expected to take their homework planners home each
day and return them the next day to
class.
In conjunction with the
homework planner, students graphed their homework
return and completion rates-another strategy that
is linked to homework completion and improved
performance on classroom assessments. The teacher
built a reward system for returning homework and
the planners. On a self-monitoring chart in their
planner, students recorded each time they completed
and returned their homework assignment by
- Coloring the square for
the day green if homework was completed and
returned.
- Coloring the square for
the day red if homework was not done.
- Coloring one-half of the
square yellow and one-half of the square red if
homework was late.
If students met the success
criterion, they received a reward at the end of the
week, such as 15 extra minutes of recess. The
teacher found that more frequent rewards were
needed for students with emotional and behavioral
disabilities.
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STRATEGY
5. ENSURE CLEAR HOME/SCHOOL
COMMUNICATION
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Homework accounts for
one-fifth of the time that successful students
invest in academic tasks, yet students complete
homework in environments over which teachers have
no controlwhich, given the fact that many
students experience learning difficulties, creates
a major dilemma. Teachers and parents of students
with disabilities must communicate clearly and
effectively with one another about homework
policies, required practices, mutual expectations,
student performance on homework, homework
completion difficulties, and other homework-related
concerns.
Recommended ways that
teachers can improve communications with parents
include
- Encouraging students to
keep assignment books.
- Providing a list of
suggestions on how parents might assist with
homework. For example, ask parents to check with
their children about homework daily.
- Providing parents with
frequent written communication about homework
(e.g., progress reports, notes, letters, forms).
- Sharing information with
other teachers regarding student strengths and
needs and necessary accommodations.
Ways that administrators can
support teachers in improving communications
include
- Supplying teachers with
the technology needed to aid communication
(e.g., telephone answering systems, e-mail,
homework hotlines).
- Providing incentives for
teachers to participate in face-to-face meetings
with parents (e.g., release time, compensation).
- Suggesting that the
school district offer after school and/or peer
tutoring sessions to give students extra help
with homework.
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SUMMARY
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The five strategies to help
students with disabilities get the most from their
homework are
- Give clear and
appropriate assignments.
- Make accommodations in
homework assignments.
- Teach study skills.
- Use a homework planner.
- Ensure clear home/school
communication.
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RESOURCES
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Bryan, T., Nelson, C., &
Mathur, S. (1995). Homework: A survey of primary
students in regular, resource, and self-contained
special education classrooms. Learning Disabilities
Research & Practice, 10(2), 85-90.
Bryan, T., &
Sullivan-Burstein, K. (1997). Homework how-to's.
TEACHING Exceptional Children, 29(6), 32-37.
Epstein, M., Munk, D.,
Bursuck, W., Polloway, E., & Jayanthi, M.
(1999). Strategies for improving home-school
communication about homework for students with
disabilities. The Journal of Special Education,
33(3), 166-176.
Jayanthi, M., Bursuck, W.,
Epstein, M., & Polloway, E. (1997). Strategies
for successful homework. TEACHING Exceptional
Children, 30(1), 4-7.
Jayanthi, M., Sawyer, V.,
Nelson, J., Bursuck, W., & Epstein, M. (1995).
Recommendations for homework-communication
problems: From parents, classroom teachers, and
special education teachers. Remedial and Special
Education, 16(4), 212-225.
Klinger, J., & Vaughn, S.
(1999). Students' perceptions of instruction in
inclusion classrooms: Implications for students
with learning disabilities. Exceptional Children,
66(1), 23-37.
Polloway, E., Bursuck, W.,
Jayanthi, M., Epstein, M., & Nelson, J. (1996).
Treatment acceptability: Determining appropriate
interventions within inclusive classrooms.
Intervention In School and Clinic, 31(3),
133-144.
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NOTE
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ERIC/OSEP Digests are in the
public domain and may be freely reproduced and
disseminated, but please acknowledge your source.
This digest was prepared with funding from the
Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP), U.S.
Department of Education, under Contract No.
ED-99-CO-0026. The opinions expressed in this
publication do not necessarily reflect the
positions or policies of OSEP or the Department of
Education.
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Information
Section: Education
Article: Five Homework
Strategies for Teaching Students with
Disabilities
Source: Cynthia Warger
(2001), ERIC/OSEP Digest
#E608*
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Page 1 of 1
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This page last updated January 7, 2005.
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